Abstract

BackgroundProvision of safe water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) to affected populations in humanitarian emergencies is necessary for dignity and communicable disease control. Additional evidence on WASH interventions is needed in humanitarian settings. Between 2008 and 2019, we completed six multi-country, mixed-methods effectiveness studies in humanitarian response on six different WASH interventions. In each evaluation, we conducted: key informant interviews; water point observations and water quality testing; household surveys with recipients, including survey and water quality testing; focus group discussions; and/or, secondary data analysis. The research questions were: “What is the effectiveness of [intervention] in reducing the risk of diarrhea/cholera transmission; and, what programmatic factors lead to higher effectiveness?”DiscussionIn all six multi-country, mixed-methods evaluations, policy-relevant outcomes were obtained. We found, in our individual research results, that: interventions could reduce the risk of disease in humanitarian contexts; this reduction of risk did not always occur, as there were large ranges in effectiveness; and, implementation factors were crucial to intervention effectiveness. When collaboratively reviewing our research process across evaluations, we found strategies for successfully conducting this research included: 1) working with partners to identify and evaluate programs; 2) rapidly obtaining approvals to deploy; and, 3) conducting research methodologies consistently. Personal connections, in-person communication, trust, and experience working together were key factors for success in identifying partners for evaluation. Successes in evaluation deployment occurred with flexibility, patience, commitment of adequate time, and understanding of processes; although we note access and security concerns in insecure contexts precluded deployment. Consistent and robust protocols, flexibility, and a consistent researcher on the ground in each context allowed for methodological consistency and high-quality results.ConclusionsIn conclusion, we have found multi-country, mixed-methods results to be one crucial piece of the WASH evidence base in humanitarian contexts. This is particularly because evaluations of reductions in risk from real-world programming are policy-relevant, and are directly used to improve programming. In future, we need to flexibly work with donors, agencies, institutions, responders, local governments, local responders, and beneficiaries to design safe and ethical research protocols to answer questions related to WASH interventions effectiveness in humanitarian response, and, improve WASH programming.

Highlights

  • Provision of safe water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) to affected populations in humanitarian emergencies is necessary for dignity and communicable disease control

  • Sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) to affected populations is necessary for human dignity and communicable disease control [4,5,6]

  • Effectiveness was defined as measures of risk reduction using consistent outcomes

Read more

Summary

Discussion

Scientific importance of research The scientific importance of multi-country, mixedmethods research is in evaluating actual WASH interventions in real time in real-world settings, which are often very different from controlled, laboratory settings. In addition to completing multi-country, mixedmethods evaluations as described our group at Tufts has had success in completing work in contexts that have the potential to be left out of research including: mixed-methods evaluation protocols on interventions within one country (Haiti, Cox’s Bazar), which simplified IRB and security logistics considerably [21]; working with UNICEF and (for security reasons, unnamed) local partners to analyze effectiveness data collected within Syria with enumerators trained over WhatsApp and data sent across the border via cell phone [22, 23]; analyzing pre-existing data and conducting effectiveness research with IDPs in Myanmar, with the support of the WASH Cluster for visas, travel authorizations, and with the WASH Cluster-established ethics approval board (manuscript in preparation); and, establishing long-term research partnerships with specific response organizations. As researchers, we hold ourselves accountable to the following question: How do we ethically and safely conduct research that protects the local population and gathers data that improves WASH interventions in humanitarian response? The myriad current regulation systems do not lend themselves to holistically keeping this core question at heart in humanitarian contexts; it is the researcher’s responsibility to do this, while keeping in mind the importance of conducting research with those most in need

Conclusions
Background
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call